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February 1, 2019 www.intellinews.com I Page 12
entirely independent from the government’s control. And at the end of 2018 the government finally dropped its resistance to an anti- corruption court (ACC), an independent court to hear the cases investigated by NABU and prosecuted by SAPO.
However, the ACC is still not functioning and Ukraine has yet to jail any high official on corruption charges. Indeed, the first “big fish” to be indicted by NABU was Roman Nasirov who was arrested in 2017. Nasirov is the head of Ukraine’s financial service and close to President Petro Poroshenko. Not only was Nasirov never prosecuted, but in January a court ruled that he could have his old job back and he has just registered as a candidate in the upcoming presidential elections.
Russia has a bad image problem when it comes to corruption, but it has also been cracking down on the cancer and made some progress. Presidential Ombudsman for Business Boris Titov was appointed a corruption tsar and there has been some progress as part of the general drive. Some 10,000 policemen have been sacked on graft charges, several regional governors jailed and even a sitting minister, Alexey Ulyukayev, was sent to prison after he was caught red handed accepting a bribe.
But in reality there is very little difference between either country as all of the countries in Eastern Europe are extremely corrupt,
despite the three point difference between Ukraine and Russia.
And the Transparency International results have to be taken with a pinch of salt as the index only measures its panellists’ perception of corruption, not actual corruption, so the results remain subjective.
A quick look at the latest bne IntelliNews Heatmap of Transparency International corruption scores over the last seven years underlines the point: Russia and Ukraine remained more or less tied in the red “highly corrupt” category, but are still noticeably better than nearly all the countries of Central Asia.
The surprise performance from these two regions is Belarus that has noticeably improved its score since 2012, rising from 31 to 44 this year. That puts Minsk ahead of most of the countries in the Balkans and just behind those in Central Europe.
Georgia is another standout success from its neighbours and Estonia is peerless in the region, ranked 18th in the survey and placed alongside the mature democracies of Belgium and Ireland. The next highest is Poland with a score of 60 that ranks it 36th, heading a pack
of the more progressive countries from Central Europe, but even these countries still have a serious corruption problem that remains a work in progress.